Minerals Beneficiation - Adsorption Studies of Dodecylamine at the Mercury-Solution Interface Through Differential Capacity and Electrocapillary Measurements and Their Implication in Flotation

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 2236 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1971
Abstract
The adsorption mechanism of dodecylammonium acetate (DAA) on mercury in potassium fluoride solutions at natural, near neutral pH was investigated. Difler-ential capacity combined with electrocapillary measurements on a dropping mercury electrode were found to provide a sensitive and reliable approach. A shift in the electro capillary maximum (or the point-of-zero-charge) towards positive polarization of the surface due to the adsorption of amine indicated a specific affinity of dodecylammonium ion for mercury surfaces. The amine was shown to adsorb competitively with potassium ion on mercury. Through correlation of the adsorption density of the amine, calculated from the thermodynamic analyses of the electrocapillary curves, and of the diflerential capacity curves, the adsorbed state and the orientation of the amine at the interface were considered. The similarities and the differences in the adsorption behavior of the amine on mercury and on such ionic solids as quartz, silver sulfide, and silver iodide were evaluated. With the promise of flotation providing a cheap and large-scale process for the upgrading of low-grade ores and magnetic concentrates, the iron ore industry has made a sustained search over the years for a flotation reagent of general applicability and high selectivity. Having shelves full of commercial reagents already on hand and anticipating more, both the users and the suppliers are in need of an experimental approach sensitive enough to differentiate the individual characteristics in each group of reagents. Therefore, the adsorption behavior of various flotation reagents on mineral surfaces from aqueous solutions has been a subject of much investigation. The current view of adsorption based on the electrical double-layer theory is formulated on the assumption that certain ions in solution act as potential-determining ions. Their concentrations fix the potential drop across the double layer and their adsorptions govern the surface charge.' Two methods used to study the adsorption
Citation
APA:
(1971) Minerals Beneficiation - Adsorption Studies of Dodecylamine at the Mercury-Solution Interface Through Differential Capacity and Electrocapillary Measurements and Their Implication in FlotationMLA: Minerals Beneficiation - Adsorption Studies of Dodecylamine at the Mercury-Solution Interface Through Differential Capacity and Electrocapillary Measurements and Their Implication in Flotation. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1971.